Profiles in Leadership | Teresa Artis
BlogDelighted to sit down with Teresa Artis (Artis Neal) for Penn State Dickinson Law's #ProfilesinLeadership fireside chat. A media attorney for 30 years, Ms. Artis provided legal and strategic counsel to local, national and global media organizations. She has particular expertise in structuring and negotiating licensing agreements across diverse technology platforms. She provides counsel at Trans World Radio (TWR) which for over 65 years has distributed inspirational and educational content in over 275 languages to people in over 190 countries via broadcast, satellite, web and mobile platforms. Her work includes compliance matters and content production, acquisition and distribution issues between TWR, global content providers and global distribution partners. Also, she provides strategic counsel to global mission entities producing content for indigenous people in oral cultures. Ms. Artis is a former member of the UNC-TV Board of Trustees and currently serves on the governing boards of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, UNC Health Rex and North Carolina Public Radio-WUNC-FM. She has had several years of graduate school or law school teaching experience, most recently serving as an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law and Campbell University, Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law. 1:53:– Finding clarity in one’s career path. 4:07:– Business and Law: The Harvard Law School Years. 5:15:– Switching lanes: Law to media. 6:56:–A culture of innovation. 12:36:–Unpacking the art of negotiation. 24:15:– A culture of regulatory compliance. 28:49:– Making your agenda their agenda. 31:00:– Strategic counsel to global mission entities producing content for indigenous people in oral cultures. 36:07:– Developing a culture of cultural sensitivity. 37:53:– How can Judeo-Christian principles help us better resolve disputes? 44:03:– Leadership on boards. 49:41:– Leading in polarized times. 52:23:– Mentors and mentees. 56:47:– 2023 and beyond.
Profiles in Leadership | Arti Rai
BlogDelighted to sit down with Professor Arti Rai for Penn State Dickinson Law #ProfilesinLeadership fireside chat. Professor Rai serves as the Elvin R. Latty Professor of Law and Faculty Director, The Center for Innovation Policy at Duke University School of Law. Professor Rai is an internationally recognized expert in intellectual property (IP) law, innovation policy, administrative law, and health law. From March to December 2021, Professor Rai served as Senior Advisor on innovation law and policy issues to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Office of General Counsel. She also regularly advises other federal and state agencies as well as Congress on these issues. She is a member of multiple distinguished councils, including the The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’ Forum on Drug Discovery, Development, and Translation, the Polaris Advisory Council to the Government Accountability Office, and the The American Law Institute. She has also served as a member of the National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research, as a public member of the Administrative Conference of the United States, and on numerous National Academies committees. From 2009-2010, Professor Rai headed the Office of Policy and International Affairs at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). In that capacity, she led policy analysis of the patent reform legislation that ultimately became the America Invents Act and worked to establish the USPTO’s Office of the Chief Economist. Prior to entering academia, Professor Rai clerked in the Northern District of California and was a litigator at Jenner & Block and the U.S. Department of Justice. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPo7QVN-O-A 1:51:– IP and #national security. 6:13:– Connecting policymakers and scientists. 8:26:– Is the US retreating from global leadership in technological investments? 10:19:– The axis of protection and commercialization. 13:24:– Are universities naïve when it comes to system integrity and security? 14:57:– Leadership lessons from Professor Rai’s formative years. 18:03:– Finding common ground. 19:22:– Balancing being decisive and open-minded. 21:33:– Leadership and parenthood. 22:42:– Academics as partners. 26:24:– Leadership in legal reform: The America Invents Act. 33:10:– Addressing objections. 26:24:– Leadership in legal reform: The America Invents Act. 36:31:– Academics as advisors: USPTO, Department of Commerce, and Congress. 39:01:– Should negotiators ‘overshoot’ to maximize their wins? 40:29:– Adapting your message to your audience. 42:10:– What leadership looks like in the presidential transition team. 47:28:– Hiring when there is no precedent. 49:44:– Can we trust the Supreme Court’s leadership in patent law post-Amgen? 53:52:– Mentors and mentees. 56:31:– 2023 and beyond.
Singapore | AI Regulation
BlogDelighted to be back in Singapore. A special thank you to Minister Vivian Balakrishnan, Dr. Stanley Lai, SC and Mr. Amrin Amrin for taking the time to meet and catch up during my relatively short trip. Thank you also to Mark Lim for inviting me to speak on the regulation of AI. I explained to a diverse audience of key stakeholders why Singapore was well poised to ride the AI wave, shared my thoughts on recent developments in the US, and the key role it could play in establishing a principled and pragmatic global code of conduct. I enjoyed hearing from Jeth Lee Larissa Lim Paul McClelland, and Cheryl Seah. Their impressive command of local and international legal developments was rivaled only by their nuanced appreciation of norms, interests, and priorities underlying AI regulation in the key jurisdictions. Ministry of Foreign Affairs Singapore Intellectual Property Office of Singapore (IPOS) Temasek Foundation IPOS International Microsoft
Profiles in Leadership | James Grimmelmann
BlogPleased to sit down with James Grimmelmann, the Tessler Family Professor of Digital and Information Law at Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School. He studies how laws regulating software affect freedom, wealth, and power. He helps lawyers and technologists understand each other, applying ideas from computer science to problems in law and vice versa. He is the author of the casebook Internet Law: Cases and Problems and of over fifty scholarly articles and essays on digital copyright, content moderation, search engine regulation, online governance, privacy on social networks,, and other topics in computer and Internet law. He has written for Slate, Salon, WIRED, Ars Technica, and Publishers Weekly; he is a regular source of expert commentary for major news media including the The New York Times, the The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and All Things Considered. He and his students created the Public Index website to inform the public about the Google Books settlement. He has been blogging since 2000 at the Laboratorium. His home page is at https://james.grimmelmann.net/. 1:49:– The Laboratorium: Independence in thought; Chatting with ChatGPT. 9:58:– Internet Law: Innovation in casebook publishing; obtaining feedback. 19:43:– #Blockchain and poop: Helping lawyers and technologists understand each other, applying ideas from computer science to problems in law and vice versa. 23:11:– How AI may change legal practice. 25:25:– How AI may transform academia. 29:11:– How higher ed should respond to AI. 30:28:– Cornell Law and Cornell Tech: Interdisciplinary teaching and research. 40:30:– Communicating through the mainstream media. 44:21:– Independence in research. 47:22:– What does meaningful feedback look like? 50:13:– Funded research. 52:24:– Mentors and mentees. 58:05:– 2023 and beyond.
Profiles in Leadership | Nick Groombridge
BlogPleased to sit down with Joe Allen, the Executive Director of the Bayh-Dole Coalition. Mr. Allen has been a leader in national efforts to foster public/private sector R&D partnerships. He was the key staffer securing the passage of the Bayh-Dole Act, opening up collaborations between research universities and the U.S. industry. The Economist Technology Quarterly called this law “possibly the most inspired piece of legislation to be enacted in America over the past half-century.” Mr. Allen was Executive Director of Intellectual Property Owners, Inc., Director of the Office of Technology Commercialization at the U.S. Dept of Commerce, and National Technology Transfer Center President. He was the lead witness in South Africa, helping secure passage of their Bayh-Dole law. he co-chaired the White House Lab to Market Summit and contributes a monthly column for I.P. Watchdog (http://www.ipwatchdog.com/authors/joseph-allen/) on public policy issues. 2:24:– Current state of public/private R&D partnerships. 6:27:– Is the “pandemic truce” unraveling? 7:35:– Passing the Bayh-Dol Act. 26:17:– Leadership lessons from Senators Bayh and Dol. 31:28:– Leadership at the ground. 41:54:– Is the Tillis-Coons pact today’s Bayh-Dol? 44:46:– Leading the Bayh-Dole Coalition. 47:54:– Have “march-in rights” failed? 52:41:– The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit: Conception, Execution, Reflection. 59:00:– US-Japan Science and Technology Transfer Agreement and South Africa’s “Bayh-Dol” moment. 1:07:50:– Can “Bayh-Dol” flourish on non-democratic soil? 1:10:23:– Mentors and mentees. 1:18:15:– 2023 and beyond.
Profiles in Leadership | Joe Allen
BlogPleased to sit down with Joe Allen, the Executive Director of the Bayh-Dole Coalition. Mr. Allen has been a leader in national efforts to foster public/private sector R&D partnerships. He was the key staffer securing the passage of the Bayh-Dole Act, opening up collaborations between research universities and the U.S. industry. The Economist Technology Quarterly called this law “possibly the most inspired piece of legislation to be enacted in America over the past half-century.” Mr. Allen was Executive Director of Intellectual Property Owners, Inc., Director of the Office of Technology Commercialization at the U.S. Dept of Commerce, and National Technology Transfer Center President. He was the lead witness in South Africa, helping secure passage of their Bayh-Dole law. he co-chaired the White House Lab to Market Summit and contributes a monthly column for I.P. Watchdog (http://www.ipwatchdog.com/authors/joseph-allen/) on public policy issues. 2:24:– Current state of public/private R&D partnerships. 6:27:– Is the “pandemic truce” unraveling? 7:35:– Passing the Bayh-Dol Act. 26:17:– Leadership lessons from Senators Bayh and Dol. 31:28:– Leadership at the ground. 41:54:– Is the Tillis-Coons pact today’s Bayh-Dol? 44:46:– Leading the Bayh-Dole Coalition. 47:54:– Have “march-in rights” failed? 52:41:– The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit: Conception, Execution, Reflection. 59:00:– US-Japan Science and Technology Transfer Agreement and South Africa’s “Bayh-Dol” moment. 1:07:50:– Can “Bayh-Dol” flourish on non-democratic soil? 1:10:23:– Mentors and mentees. 1:18:15:– 2023 and beyond.
Profiles in Leadership | Penn State Provost Justin Schwartz (feat. Dean Danielle Conway)
BlogPenn State Dickinson Law's Profiles in Leadership series offers an unparalleled opportunity to glean insights from top leaders who serve in government, education, the private sector, and civil society. In each episode, we invite these leaders to reflect on their journey and share skills, core values, and qualities that make them the leaders they are today. This special episode features Penn State University Provost Justin Schwartz in one of his first "live" interviews as Provost. It also features Dean Danielle Conway, usually the one interviewed, taking on the rarely seen role of interviewer. I very much enjoyed their engaging, insightful, and inspiring conversation. Hope and trust that you will too. 2:36:– Formative years: #baseball, #racialintegration, and “warmth” on the pathway to #engineering . 10:22:– Multiple pathways and #philosophy to #innovation. 17:00:– Transitioning from “doing” to “leading.” 22:00:– Leadership lessons from the #PennState community. 24:32:– Entrepreneurship in higher education. 28:02:– Staying focused. 35:06:– Lessons from working with President Neeli Bendapudi. 39:46:– Mapping goal setting from unit to university. 47:05:– Prioritizing goals. 50:39:– Wellness and wellbeing. 52:22:– His “#moonshot.” For other episodes in the series and to be notified of new episodes, please subscribe to: https://www.youtube.com/@PennStatesDickinsonLawCarlisle/videos
NY | Meetings & Panel on AI & Copyright Law
BlogGreat to be back in New York. Visited Malla Pollack (Callmann on Unfair Competition, Trademarks, and Monopolies) to learn the intricacies of writing and updating a multivolume treatise. Caught up with Joshua L. Simmons (Kirkland & Ellis). Check out Josh's Practising Law Institute (PLI) series 'IP Discussions with Joshua Simmons' (link here: https://bit.ly/44e7vZj). Met with David Kappos (Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP) to get his thoughts on an upcoming initiative. Joined fellow PLI faculty Jessica R. Friedman Robert Clarida Lateef Mtima to discuss copyright and AI. Photos (L-R): Elizabeth Harris (PLI); Malla Pollack; Josh Simmons; Lateef Mtima and Kenneth Min; Dave Kappos; with my panel; post-panel chit-chat..
PLI | Copyright, AI & the Metaverse
BlogLooking forward to returning to New York this week to join Robert Clarida Kyle Citrynell Jessica R. Friedman Thomas Kjellberg and Lateef Mtima for Practising Law Institute (PLI) 's seminar on copyright law. Details: https://www.pli.edu/programs/F/fundamentals-of-copyright-law-in-the-data-era Penn State Dickinson Law Reitler Kailas & Rosenblatt LLP Seiller Waterman LLC Cowan, Liebowitz & Latman, P.C. Howard University School of Law Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice Kenneth Min #intellectualproperty #law #data
Institute for IP and Social Justice | Interview with Howard Law 3L Liana Alston
BlogPleased to join Liana Alston, a third-year law student at Howard University School of Law, for a wide-ranging discussion on how social justice intersects with intellectual property law and antitrust law, the impact of AI on society and the law, and more. Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice #intellectualproperty #ai #law #data #society Allen & Gledhill LLP NUS Faculty of Law Stanford Law School Fordham University School of Law University of Illinois Chicago University of Illinois Chicago School of Law Gary Friedlander Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition Emily C. and John E. Hansen IP Institute at Fordham Law School IPLAC - Intellectual Property Law Association of Chicago Illinois Intellectual Property Alliance - ILIPA Penn State Dickinson Law Penn State University Penn State Institute for Computational and Data Sciences